Bathroom Organization Ideas That Actually Work in Small Spaces
The bathroom is the smallest room most people try to organize — and the one where clutter builds up the fastest. Between skincare products, hair tools, medications, cleaning supplies, and that collection of hotel shampoos you can't seem to throw away, even a spacious bathroom can feel cramped.
In Los Angeles, where many homes and apartments have compact bathrooms, smart organization isn't optional — it's survival. Here's how we approach bathroom organization for our clients, and how you can apply the same principles at home.
Start With the Purge
Before you buy a single organizer or container, pull everything out of your bathroom. Every drawer, every cabinet, every shelf. Put it all on your bed or a table where you can see it.
Now go through each item and ask three questions:
- Is it expired? Medications, sunscreen, and skincare products all have expiration dates. If it's past its date, toss it.
- Have I used it in the past 3 months? Bathrooms have limited space. If you haven't reached for it recently, it probably doesn't need prime real estate.
- Do I have duplicates? Three half-used bottles of the same conditioner? Consolidate and keep one.
Most people eliminate 30-40% of their bathroom items in this step alone. That's storage space you didn't know you had.
Under the Sink: The Most Wasted Space
The cabinet under the bathroom sink is notoriously difficult to organize. The pipes take up space, the cabinet is deep and dark, and things get shoved to the back and forgotten.
The fix:
- Stackable drawers that fit around the pipes — these transform dead space into usable storage
- A lazy Susan for cleaning products so you can spin to find what you need
- Clear bins to group items by category (hair products, cleaning, first aid)
- A tension rod across the cabinet for hanging spray bottles
The key to under-sink organization is working with the pipes, not fighting them. Measure your space first, then buy containers that fit.
The Shower and Tub Area
Shower caddies that suction to the wall and fall off at 3 AM. Bottles lined up on the edge of the tub, falling into the water mid-shower. Sound familiar?
Better solutions:
- Tension pole caddies that go floor-to-ceiling — they hold more and never fall
- Built-in niches if you're renovating (the gold standard)
- Hanging shower organizers over the showerhead with rust-proof hooks
- Limit to essentials only — keep backstock under the sink, not in the shower
A good rule: only the products you use daily should live in the shower. Everything else stays outside it.
Countertop Strategy
Bathroom countertops are magnets for clutter. Toothbrushes, soap, lotion, makeup, hair products — before you know it, you can't see the counter anymore.
Our approach: Only three categories belong on the counter — items you use twice daily (toothbrush, face wash), hand soap, and one decorative element. Everything else gets a home inside a drawer or cabinet.
If you must keep more on the counter, use a single tray or container to corral items. This creates visual order even when the items themselves are varied. A simple acrylic tray or a small marble dish works perfectly.
Drawer Organization
Bathroom drawers without dividers become junk drawers within a week. Hair ties mix with medications, cotton swabs scatter everywhere, and finding anything requires excavation.
The solution is simple: drawer dividers. You can use:
- Adjustable bamboo dividers for flexibility
- Clear acrylic organizers for a clean look
- Small bins or cups for tiny items (bobby pins, hair ties, cotton balls)
Assign each section a category: dental care, hair accessories, skincare, first aid. When everything has a designated spot, putting things away takes seconds instead of minutes.
Towels and Linens
Towels take up enormous space in a small bathroom. The trick isn't buying fewer towels — it's storing them smarter.
- Roll instead of fold — rolled towels take up less space and look great in open shelving or baskets
- Use vertical space — a ladder shelf or wall-mounted rack takes zero floor space
- Keep only 2 sets per person in the bathroom — store extras in a linen closet
- Match your towels — one color creates a spa-like feel and eliminates visual chaos
The Medicine Cabinet
If you have a medicine cabinet, treat it like premium real estate. This is eye-level, easy-access storage — don't waste it on items you rarely use.
Top shelf: items used less frequently (medications, first aid supplies). Middle shelves: daily-use items (skincare, deodorant, contact solution). Bottom shelf: items you grab in a hurry (toothpaste, mouthwash).
Use small shelf risers to double the capacity of each shelf. And clear out expired medications every six months — set a reminder on your phone.
Ready for a bathroom transformation?
We organize bathrooms in Los Angeles — usually in just a few hours.
Book a Free ConsultationA well-organized bathroom makes your morning routine faster and your evening wind-down calmer. You don't need a big bathroom — you need a smart one. Start with the purge, give everything a home, and watch how much easier your daily routine becomes.